• ChonkyOwlbear@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    The rubric is literally right below what you quoted

    The categories are as follows:

    1. Biased Wording/Headlines- Does the source use loaded words to convey emotion to sway the reader. Do headlines match the story?

    2. Factual/Sourcing- Does the source report factually and back up claims with well-sourced evidence.

    3. Story Choices: Does the source report news from both sides, or do they only publish one side.

    4. Political Affiliation: How strongly does the source endorse a particular political ideology? Who do the owners support or donate to?

    Just because it is a qualitative and not a quantitative assessment doesn’t mean it’s arbitrary.

    • Aurenkin@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      Yes I agree, and just because there is a methodology doesn’t make the result not arbitrary. Can you explain what number four means? How do I assess it, what’s a 0, what’s a 5 and what’s a 10? How does number 2 relate to bias, isn’t that a factuality rating thing , why is it in the bias rubric? It’s a joke, each rating is totally arbitrary as there is no definition of what each one means beyond some vague description of the category. It’s essentially pick a number, feels based.

      I have worked with qualitive rubrics before and this one is barely worthy of the name honestly. Two people could take this rubric away and come to completely opposite conclusions based on their own biases.